CNN Finds Out About Bumpfire Stocks – Machine Gun Loophole

It really just shows how little effort they put in to researching anything, and keeping up on a topic such as guns. I wonder how long it will be until they find out that any Glock can be converted to automatic by replacing the slide plate with something that “could be machined in a home garage”…. I can see it now. Maybe even an article about the danger of shoestrings sometime? Oh shit, I let the cat out of the bag.

I hope this isn’t the beginning of new fearmongering. I’ve always hated those stupid things. I knew they’d get gun owners in trouble some day. And what sucks is they’re stupid. THey’re novelties that people have to have and they use them a time or two and put them away because showing off gets expensive. Besides, real men learn to bump fire with a normal rifle while shouldered – like Cokeman.

What? It is new fearmongering as you can plainly see from the clip. But it is also bullshit and lies as you can also plainly see from the clip. As for your hate for a stock…can’t help you there. They are fun to use so I don’t know what to tell ya…
So they are stupid too huh? And only get used once or twice? And I am just showing off? And I am not a real man? Does owning a slidefire or equivelant equate to someone not knowing how to bumpfire other ways?

I have one installed on a 15-22 right now….guess how many rounds I have bumped out with that rifle since I tossed the stock on? Hint: (I have 6-25 round stick mags and 2-50 round drum mags for this rifle) If I loaded up those mags twice I am through a brick already.

Do you work for CNN by chance? Because with the derp you just spewed, you sound like you would fit right in there. xD

Someone show them a clip of bumpboarding a pistol…or you can bumpfire a pistol without a bumpboard…you just need a rigid finger. BAN FINGERS!

It would be funny if someone trolled them with a “3D Printed Bullet Machine” that is installed into a gun. They could say it magnetically grabs particles out of the environment to use for ammunition manufacturing when the magazine nears emptiness.